The prophet, having declared the judgments which were ready to
fall on
his people, earnestly exhorts them to repentance, that these
judgments
may be averted, 1-3.
He then foretells the fate of other neighboring and
hostile nations: the Philistines, 4-7;
Moabites and Ammonites, 8-11;
Ethiopians, 12;
and Assyrians, 13. In the
close of the chapter we have a
prophecy against Nineveh. These predictions were accomplished
chiefly
by the conquests of Nebuchadnezzar.
Notes on Chapter 2
Verse 1. Gather
yourselves Others, sift yourselves.
Separate the chaff
from the wheat, before the judgments of God fall upon you. O
nation not
desired-unlovely, not delighted in; hated because of your sin.
The Israelites
are addressed.
Verse 3. Ye meek of the
earth
ywn[
anavey, ye oppressed and humbled
of the land.
It may be ye shall be hid The sword has not a
commission against you.
Ask God, and he will be a refuge to you from the storm and from
the
tempest.
Verse 4. Gaza shall be
forsaken This prophecy is against
the
Philistines. They had been greatly harassed by the kings of
Egypt; but
were completely ruined by Nebuchadnezzar, who took all Phoenicia
from
the Egyptians; and about the time of his taking Tyre, devastated
all the
seignories of the Philistines. This ruin we have seen foretold
by the other
prophets, and have already remarked its exact fulfillment.
Verse 5. The sea-coasts,
the nation of the Cherethites
The sea-coasts
mean all the country lying on the Mediterranean coast from Egypt
to
Joppa and Gaza. The Cherethites-the Cretans who were probably a
colony of the Phoenicians. See on 1 Samuel 30:14, and Amos 9:7.
Verse 6. And the sea-coasts
shall be dwellings Newcome considers
trk keroth as a proper name,
not cottages or folds. The Septuagint have
krhth, Crete, and so has the
Syriac. Abp. Secker notes, Alibi non extat
trk, et forte notat patriam
twn ΅ytrk.
The word trk
is not found
elsewhere, and probably it is the name of the country of the
Cherethim.
Verse 7. The coast shall
be for the remnant Several
devastations fell on
the Philistines. Gaza was ruined by the army of Alexander the
Great, and
the Maccabees finally accomplished all that was predicted by the
prophets against this invariably wicked people. They lost their
polity, and
were at last obliged to receive circumcision.
Verse 8. I have heard the
reproach of Moab God punished them
for
the cruel part they had taken in the persecutions of the Jews;
for when
they lay under the displeasure of God, these nations insulted
them in the
most provoking manner. See on Amos 1:13, and the parallel texts
in the
margin.
Verse 9. The breeding of
nettles That is, their land shall
become
desolate, and be a place for nettles, thorns, etc., to flourish
in, for want of
cultivation.
Verse 10. Because they
have reproached See on ver. 8.
Verse 11. He will famish
all the gods of the earth They
shall have no
more sacrifices; their worship shall be entirely destroyed.
Idolaters
supposed that their gods actually fed on the fumes and
spirituous
exhalations that arose from the burnt-offerings which they made
unto their
idols. It is in reference to this opinion that the Lord says,
He will famish
all the gods of the land.
Verse 12. Ye Ethiopians
also Nebuchadnezzar subdued these.
See
Jeremiah 46:2, 9; Ezekiel 30:4, 10. See also on Amos 9:17.
Verse 13. 7Be will-destroy
Assyria He will overthrow the empire, and
Nineveh, their metropolitan city. See on Jonah and Nahum.
Verse 14. And flocks
shall lie down in the midst of her
Nineveh was
so completely destroyed, that its situation is not at present
even known.
The present city of Mossoul is supposed to be in the vicinity of
the place
where this ancient city stood.
The cormorant
taq kaath; and the bittern,
dpq
kippod. These Newcome
translates, The pelican and the porcupine.
Their voice shall sing in the windows The windows shall
be all
demolished; wild fowl shall build their nests in them, and shall
be seen
coming from their sills, and the fine cedar ceilings shall be
exposed to the
weather, and by and by crumble to dust. See the note on Isaiah
34:11, 14,
where nearly the same terms are used.
I have in another place introduced a remarkable couplet quoted
by Sir W.
Jones from a Persian poet, which speaks of desolation in nearly
the same
terms.
[P]
The spider holds the veil in the palace of Caesar: The owl
stands sentinel
in the watchtower of Afrasiab.
Verse 15. This is the
rejoicing city The city in which
mirth, jocularity,
and pleasure, reigned without interruption.
And wag his hand Will point her out as a mark and
monument of
Divine displeasure. |